Bumpkin’s Bestiary

Found Material Sculpture/Site Specific Installation 2007

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Bumpkin’s Bestiary

In collaboration with Sarah Fierberg Phillips & Jonah Goldstein, with help from Eric Freeman

I returned to plant sculpture, found materials, and environmental installation in a low-tech context as a participant in the 2007 Bumpkin Island Art Encampment. This unusual event, organized by the Berwick Research Institute, Island Alliance, and Studio Soto, took place over labor day weekend on a small island in the Boston Harbor.

Using the metaphor of homesteading as a point of departure, 40 artists in ten groups will embark on new artistic and geographic terrain. With only the materials they can carry on their backs and a short 5-day window of time, the artists will adapt ambitious projects to the challenges and opportunities of an island environment.

Part residency, part survivalist experiment, and fully impressionable, malleable, speculative and reflective, the Encampment allows artists to explore new possibilities, removed from the distractions and discourses of the mainland. Yet, like an explorer with a partially drawn map to be fully formed in expedition, the project presents itself as a microcosm of transparent, possible attributes and actions for a culture stripped bare and invented anew.

Our team built sculptures comprised entirely of materials we scavenged from around the island. Our creations – a giant twig chicken, a goat with internal organs made of garbage, and a rusty metal pig – embodied a Darwinesque fantasy of exotic, mutated, feral creatures on a remote island. The results of the project were documented in the Land Grab exhibition at APEXART in New York City, and featured online at the German art site wooloo.org.

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Sound Parasites Switzerland

Wearable Sound Robots/Soft Sculptures/Performance 2007

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Sound Parasites Switzerland

    Cabled Madness Performance Series, Cabaret Voltaire, Digital Art Weeks Festival, Zürich, Switzerland 2007
The Sound Parasites returned in a 2nd iteration for an international audience when I was invited to participate in the Digital Art Weeks festival organized by Eldgenössiche Techniche Hochschule Zürich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zürich).

After presenting my research on self-contained digital sound modules at the conference portion, I fulfilled a lifelong dream by performing with the Parasites at the legendary Cabaret Voltaire, birthplace of the Dada art movement and still an exciting venue for avant-garde art. I was part of a ‘wired freak show’ with an international cast of performers who mixed technology with provocation and humor.

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Experimental TV

Residency 2007

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In collaboration with Steve Hoey

In March 2007 I completed an Artist Residency at the historic Experimental Television Center. ETC has an incredible collection of vintage, one-of-a-kind, hand-built video equipment that has been lovingly maintained. Steve and I spent an inspiring week experimenting with the creations of video art pioneers such as Nam June Paik and Dan Sandin, whose ‘Wobulator’ and ‘Image Processor’ video synthesizers continue to yield dynamic, abstract imagery more than 30 years later. We generated about 10 hours of video material, which we are continuing to refine into several pieces.
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213.189.138.114

Time-Lapse Video with Musical Score 2007

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213.189.138.114

This piece is part of an ongoing series of short videos developed using “virtual cameras.”  At present, there are thousands of web cams or networked security cameras that are publicly broadcast over the internet. A simple google search reveals countless results for these type of cameras, including many that are perhaps not intended for public scrutiny but are catalogued nonetheless by google’s bots.

This project is based on the telematic practice of “sampling” images from these cameras, whose presence is virtual but whose subjects are real. I meld these found images into time-lapse videos, then use the results as a visual “score” for which I compose musical accompaniment. The resulting rhythms of change, textures of image, and qualities of light form an expressive, subtle portrait of the original spaces, of which the exact actual location is never known.

In addition to manifesting the specific, quotidian character of these indoor and outdoor urban spaces, the works incorporate themes of surveillance, networked communication as a means of bridging virtual and actual spaces, and an unusual approach to sampling and found materials.

Video loop:

high-res (6 mb)

low-res (3 mb)

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